So I cannot argue against this article:
http://design.antigov.org/txt/Lasse_Nordlund.htma small quote:
"Unlike it's generally presumed, we did not manage to make energy collection in primary production more efficient by the use of technology, or by a sophisticated division of labour. A tractor pulling a seven-bladed plough may look efficient, but it collects food energy a lot less efficiently than a person working by hand in a garden – when we take into account the energy and working time inputs more broadly than just for the individual farmer. To figure this out, we must assess how much energy it takes to collect primary energy indirectly, in a mechanized way. The results must be compared to the energy input that would have been necessary if had we collected the same amount of energy manually, using only simple tools.
During their lifespans, machines use energy as fuels and through maintenance, but also during the manufacturing process and eventually when they are disposed of. When a machine is manufactured, the more technologically advanced the machine is, the more energy will go into making it. This is because the energy needed to make a particular machine includes the energy it took to build all the machinery used to make it, and the energy used to build the machines that built that machinery as well.
In practice, we can trace the energy inputs in a manufacturing pyramid only to a limited extent, so the sum of energy inputs we get will always be less than what has really been used in the making of a machine. Even though, say a computer's dimensions are small, to manufacture one requires a large, energy consuming infrastructure from a network of roads to information networks.
This helps to explain in part why, despite "energy-saver machines" becoming more common, our energy consumption continues to grow explosively. With new machines, machine development promises us more saved energy, but at the same time it creates new ways to consume energy. The attempt to amend the energy deficit has become anunrelenting ascent into new energy consumption heights. Energy efficiency calculations in technical bulletins give a false idea about a machine's energy consumption by concentrating solely on the energy consumed when the machine is operating; for example, by concentrating on how long a distance can a vehicle travel with an amount of fuel. It's problematic to estimate a machine's utility entirely separately from the environment it is impacting. A heavy tractor compresses farmland, which then takes more energy to plough, which raises the energy needed to make a unit of food. The concept of energy efficiency leaves out the indirect energy needs that arise from having a machine in the first place, including ore mining, transportation, marketing, maintenance and changes in working technique. A car needs terrain cleared into a road to ride."